AliExpress is legitimate. It is a global marketplace owned by Alibaba Group, one of the largest e-commerce companies in the world, and it has operated since 2010 with a formal buyer protection program that refunds orders that never arrive or arrive significantly not as described. The nuance is that AliExpress is a marketplace of hundreds of thousands of independent sellers — so individual seller quality varies enormously — and its name is widely abused by phishing sites and fake storefronts that have nothing to do with the real platform.
What AliExpress Actually Is
AliExpress is the international retail arm of Alibaba Group, a publicly traded company listed in New York and Hong Kong. Unlike a traditional store, AliExpress itself sells almost nothing — it hosts third-party sellers, mostly Chinese manufacturers and wholesalers, and handles the payment escrow between you and them. Your money is held by the platform and released to the seller after delivery, which is the backbone of its buyer protection.
This escrow model is why AliExpress has survived fifteen years while genuinely fraudulent "China direct" sites come and go. If a seller does not ship, or ships a brick instead of a phone, you open a dispute and the platform can refund you from the held funds.
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How Buyer Protection Works — and Where It Fails
- Every order has a protection window. If the item does not arrive by the deadline shown on the order, you can open a dispute and claim a refund. This works reliably for non-delivery.
- "Not as described" disputes need evidence. Photograph and video everything when a package arrives. Disputes with clear photo evidence of the wrong or broken item usually succeed; vague complaints often fail.
- Never complete a transaction off-platform. The classic AliExpress seller scam is asking you to cancel the order and pay by bank transfer, Western Union, or crypto "for a discount." The moment money leaves the platform, buyer protection is gone. Any seller who suggests this is scamming you.
- Confirm receipt only when satisfied. Tapping "Confirm Received" releases funds to the seller. Some sellers pressure buyers to confirm early — do not, until you have inspected the item.
Common Problems That Are Not Scams (But Feel Like It)
- Long shipping times. Two to five weeks is normal for standard shipping. Track the order in the app before assuming fraud.
- Counterfeit and inflated-spec goods. Branded electronics, memory cards claiming impossible capacities, and designer-lookalike items are widespread. A 2TB flash drive for $8 is fake regardless of its packaging. Buy generics, not "brands."
- Review manipulation. Some listings pad reviews. Sort by newest and look for reviews with buyer photos.
- Choice/local warehouse confusion. Items shipped from local warehouses arrive faster but returns can work differently. Read the specific listing's return terms.
The Actual Scams: Fake AliExpress Sites and Messages
The most dangerous "AliExpress scams" happen entirely outside the platform:
- Cloned storefronts. Scammers register domains resembling AliExpress and clone its design, harvesting card details from shoppers who arrived via search ads or social media links. The only real domain is aliexpress.com. Check the automated trust report for aliexpress.com to see the legitimate domain's profile — a lookalike domain registered weeks ago will look nothing like it.
- Phishing emails about your "AliExpress account." Fake order confirmations for purchases you never made, designed to panic you into clicking a "cancel order" link that leads to a credential-stealing login page.
- Delivery-fee texts. While you wait weeks for a real order, a text claims your package needs a customs fee. It is the same template as every delivery scam text: a tiny fee request fronting a card-harvesting page.
- "AliExpress recruitment" job scams. Messages offering paid work "boosting AliExpress orders." These are task scams: small early payouts to build trust, then demands that you deposit your own money to "unlock" fake commissions.
How to Buy on AliExpress Safely
- Check seller history. Prefer stores open several years with high positive-feedback percentages and many orders on the specific item you want.
- Judge prices against reality. If an item costs a tenth of its price everywhere else, you are buying a counterfeit or a disappointment. On a marketplace this size, too-good-to-be-true still applies per listing.
- Pay by card or PayPal through the platform — never by transfer, gift card, or crypto, and never off-platform.
- Document deliveries. Open packages on camera for expensive orders; it makes disputes nearly unlosable.
- Keep all communication in the app. Disputes can only consider what happened on-platform.
AliExpress vs. Alibaba vs. Fake "Direct From Factory" Sites
A common source of confusion: Alibaba.com is the same parent company's wholesale platform for business buyers, with minimum order quantities and negotiated deals — it is also legitimate, but its protections work differently and it is not designed for consumers. Meanwhile, thousands of unrelated "factory direct" and "warehouse clearance" websites borrow the aesthetic of both platforms without belonging to either. These single-product or small-catalog sites, usually advertised on social media with dramatic closing-down-sale stories, have none of the escrow protection described above. If a site is not actually aliexpress.com, nothing about AliExpress's buyer protection applies to it, no matter how similar it looks. Check the domain, then check its age and reputation before paying.
The Verdict
AliExpress is legit, with real escrow-based buyer protection that works if you stay inside its rules. Individual sellers range from excellent to shady, so the platform rewards careful buyers and punishes impulsive ones. The genuinely dangerous fraud — cloned sites, phishing emails, fee texts — impersonates AliExpress rather than living on it. For related patterns, browse our shopping scams hub.
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